|
|
|
|
|
by sweeeety
2580 days ago
|
|
I would like to hear more about my European fellows w.r.t. how GDPR affected their ability to muster domain knowledge. I used to work for a small start-up and the CTO was very strict on data access, making my life as feature developer and "data scientist wanna be" almost impossible. He, on the other hand, had not only access to all data but also used the product as a consumer (which didn't make sense for ICs so we ended just playing with sales demo accounts). I ended leaving the company because of that. |
|
What boils down to is that people who have any extra data access privilege will have the lead.
Most of the insights will come from aggregate data, so I think companies could work around privacy concerns but I am no GDPR expert.
Back in my days in academia, there was a saying “if you have the trace, you have the paper”.